ram, Garten and Household, Ftnlt -Tr* Bartn. The Gcrmantowu Telegraph sava : Let not onr readers forget that much of the weakening of our fruit trees is owing to ahaolnte atarvation caused by the workings of atom borers. The supply of Rap upward is out off by every hole which they make, and is just so much put in the way of the tree get ting all the food it needs. Is is no use to manure trees, and keep our eye on all other cultural details, if these rascals are permitted to continue their depre dations. This is one of the lwst seasons of the year to look after and destroy them. The eggs laid during the sum mer are now developed to a considerable "worm," and it is working its way down between the hark and wood, or even into the wood, ao as to get com fortable quarters for the winter. Their presence can be readily ascertained by noting a little fresh-looking matter like sawdust near the tree at the surface of the gronnd, which the larva> eject in their boring course. To destroy them get a trowel and dig awav a little from the stem, so as to find exactly the opening of the channel made Ivy the insect, and then thrust down a piece of stiff wire upon it, which will generally end its day. To many this looks like a considerable job ; but a smart hand can get through with several hundred trees a day in tnis search, as the fresh dust affords an unerring cine to the direct whereabouts of the marauder. This is not only a good season to look after this pest on this account, but as it is the cider time the owner is generally about the orchard now and can oversee the work and aid it by his advice or personal assistance. 1N,,,,, Awonf Apple Trc. Abont this time of year, says the Ro chester Union, there is always s "scare" abont the apple crop, which is generally made out ot whole cloth for the benefit of grower* and dealers, to be reaped st the expense of consumers. The Lock port Journal, however, makes seme statements that appear to be well grounded, and as Niagara is one cf the largest, if not the largest, apple grow ing county in the State, they are of in terest. It sav* a disease is" prevailing iu the orchards there that has destroy ed many trees. It manifests itself in a curling of the leaves ; the* hark dies ; then the body of the tree dies upward about a foot from the ground ; the dis ease also extends into the root several feet, and kills the whole tree. The hark tightens and adheres firmly to the tree, and does not crack nor peel. There seems to be no preeeptible cause for fa tality among the apple trees ; no grubs can le found nor anything else that would be likely to destroy. About fifteen trees in a splendid orchard belonging to Mr. George W. Tower, in the town of rtirter, have been attacked with this disease and killed. The trees were from fifteen to twenty years edd. Several other instances in various towns are mentioned where fine, healthv apple trees have been destroyed in like man ner. A Small rnw Dairy. I give my way of making, with three or four cows, a" cheese that will weigh from 10 to 15 pounds : Take milk that is sweet. Do not remove much of the cream from the night's milk, then warm it so that it shall be of the same tem perature as the morning's milk fresh from the cows, and mix night's and morning's milk together. A piece of calf s rennet should have been soaked in a half pint of water over night. Put one-hajf or more in the milk, adding more if not sufficient. Then after it turns, take your ladle or knife, and cut through and through, dividing the curd into small squares. When the whey separates, pour it all off; then take boiling water and pour over it; let it stand ten minutes in the water ; this is to give it a toughness, and prevents its being "crumbly ; " now let it stand in some kind of vessel in a cool place un til it gets entirely cold; then chop it up fine and salt it to taste, and put it into the press, pressing moderately hard for three hours ; then take it out and turn it; then press abont three hoars; again take it out and tarn it and plaoe on a clean shelf, rub a little butter over it, turning it once a day.— Cincinnati CommereiaL Seep Wash far Krnll Tree*. The beneficial influence of a weak alkali wash upon the bark of fruit trees is of long standing acknowledgement. Its action is in the expansion of the pores, while at the same time it is de structive of all insect liie, sporadic or otherwise. Writers or theorists differ as to the best time to apply it; but we have always found that if good common sense be used in preparing it, any time of ap plication is always good. "And now for the preparation. If you purchased potash, reduce it so that TOO can bear your finger in it half a minute or more without a tingling sensation. If you can obtain good soft soap from the" refuse grease of lye and ashes saved up drv, then take and reduce it (the soap) down, not to suds, but so that it will not be ropy when used by a soft whitewash brush. Use it freelv, and it matters not materially jnst when, bnt say now, and any time most convenient until Ist of July; but after that time it is per hapr better to wait till the next year. —American Farm Journal. Kfleet ot Manur* on Weeds. The application of manures suited to particular kinds of cultivated plants appear* to have an efficient effect in checking the growth of weeds, which would otherwise prove injurious. In regard to clover, it was found that when the land was wholly unmanured the weeds formed 57 per cent, of -the entire yield ; but that the application of gyp sum reduced the proportion of weeds to two per cent. Nitrogenous manures had very slight effect, andphosphatic manures but Itttle more. We must not from this, however, consider gypsum as an antidote to weeds in general", since it is a specific manure for clover, and gives it a power to struggle successfully with the weeds and crowd them out. The Two Captains. A quarter of a century ago, a New Hampshire town boasted of a couple of field pieces, and a fire engine of limited capacity. Companies were or ganized to take care of each, with Cap tain Smith, the auctioneer, heading the military, and Captain Jones, a tinsmith, the civic command. Both men were of marked peculiarities, outspoken and positive, and they were political and personal enemies. One day they had leen wrangling before a crowd of vil lagers, and Jones, getting angry, turn ing to leave, said, with a sneer, "If nnv man wants a commission in the ar tillery, he must calf on Captain Smith !" This raised a laugh at the expense of the military hero, the ranks of nis com pany having been swelled by the enlist ment of very yoaog recruits, but keep ing perfectly cool, he pointed his long right arm at the retreating firemen, and shouted, " Everybody wanting promo tion in the squirt-gun company will fol low Captain Jones !" It was a long time before " Captain Jones of the Squirt-Gun " heard the last of the en counter, in which the heavy ordnance won a positive victory. Is TUB BOWKT.B OP THE EARTH.—In driftingon the 1,400 foot level of the Crown Point mine at Virginia City, the workmen keep a hole of considerable depth drilled ahead of the main work, in order that they may not suddenly break through into a large body or natural reservoir of water. A day or two since, while thus boring ahead in the rock, a vein of water was tapped which was exceedingly hot, so hot that eggs were boiled in it, and boiled till very hard at that The eggs were placed in the drill hole, a bit of rock placed before them to back the water over them, and in a few minutes they were boiled as hard as could have been done anywhere. Sam Jones, superin tendent of the mine, who cooked and ate some of the eggs, is of the opinion that this bit of oookery was performed at a greater depth in the bowels of motheiv earth than any that has ever Seen dtme on the Pacific coast. \w Hampshire granted 179 divorces The G is* Murder. A Stnnr Mat ami Its til i *•*••—Jn ■* Blow towl lf. From the facts thus far collected a pretty clear account of lloaa'a wander ings umy be given as follows: On the night ot February '2, 187*2, w hen Goss aid fire to his bniiditig in Haiti more, and ran down the lane, as he was Been by several to do, leaving a body to be burned in the ruina, he jumped into the buggy which waa held in waiting by A. C. (hss, his brother, end drove to the Philadelphia depot. Taking the train he went to Philadelphia and New York, and thence further North. At Saratoga lie mailed a letter to A. C. (loss, Balti more. Tins letter was addressed iu A. 0. Goaa'a own hand writing, and the fugitive must have been provided with it to avoid showing his own handwriting. From Saratoga he went straight to Mon treal, remaining there sonic time. Next lie was traced to a amall place ea*t of Toronto, ami at other periods to Lon don and Hamilton, Canada. He is be lieved to have remained in Canada sev eral mouths. Thence he was traced to Michigan, where he was lost sight of. bnt the probability is that he passed throngli Detroit and continued on down to Nashville, Tenu. On June 28, 1872, he arrived at David U. Mulliii's, iu Oooperatown. The lette-a froui Cdder aook to Mr. Mulliti, endeavoring to pro cure board for a friend, are dated re spectively iu October and November, 1871, and upon Mr, Mullin's refusing to take the t>oarder the matter was drop ped ; but Goaa'a lading place in Tennes see becoming too hot for him, he. fol lowing Udderaook'a advice, csme to this locality, believing that Mtillin would not turn him awav when he should ac tually present hilii-elf. Iu explanation of the long period which elapsed le --tween the writing of these letters siul the perpetration of the fraud, it may be explained that the plot was maturing through many months. It is believed that it was planned in April, 1871, and that it was intended it should le con summated in the early part of the win ter, but for some reason it was post p.rned to February. It will In- remem bered that Goss, alias A. C. Wilson, in troduced himself to Mr. Mnlliu as the person that Uddaraook had recom mended, and said that he had lately come froni Tennessee. From that time to Nov. 28, 18?2, he was in Coopers town, or that vicinity, for on Nov. 28 he received stO at Byrnmaw, the nearest stat on on the Pennsylvania Bail road. He was next heard of in Newark, N. J., where he boarded from i>eo. 1 to June 27. Here he is said to have paid his board with tolerable regularity, and was liked bv his fellow boarders. He se cluded himself to such a degree that his fellow boarders thought there was some mystery connected with him. He pan! attentions to a young lady who boarded in the house with him, and wheu he went from Newark he wanted her to ehpe with him, promising to take her to Europe. At Newark, Goss was visited bv persons who, from the description given of them, were Udderxook and A. C. Goes. Wheu he left Newark he told his landlady that he was going to Phila delphia to meet his doctor, ai.d expected to receive $1,500. The only doctor he met iu Philadelphia was Udderxook. They went on the Philadelphia aud Bal timore Central Railroad to West Grove, thence going on foot to Jciyierville, where they arrived on June 20, the day before the murder. A man has been found in Philadel phia who heard Wilson speak of A. 0. Goss, and has seen a letter from A. C. Goss to A. C. Wilson, the envelope of which was stamped with a furniture monogram. A. (3. Goss works iu Bal timore, at Stevens's furniture shop. A mau has also been found to whom A. C. Wilson talked freely of A. C. Goss, and said that he remained away from home on account of a lawsuit, amounting to $28,000, in which he was deeply inter ested. The ageut of the insurance companies now has several express receipts of packages sent to A. Campbell Goas from A. C. Wilson while stopping at differ ent points. These receipts show that A. C. Wilson, during his stay at Cooperstown, had sent several pack ages to A. C. Goss, Baltimore, supposed to have contained letters. While Wilson or Goss lived in Newark, all money came to him by ex press, but it WSB never receipted for by nim. Iu vry ed*e his ianuladv, Mrs. Toombs, called at the express office, got the money, and receipted for the same. When he wrote to A. C. Goas, his let ters were taken to New York by a friend and there placed in the express office. (toss's watch, said to have been burned in the fire, has been traced to a certain point beyond a doubt. The silver leaf covering the face had Goss'a name on it, bnt was torn off. Two theories have been framed in regard to the murder. One is that Udderzook was a treacherous villain, who deceived both sides, and that he killed Goss for money. By those taking this view it is believed that Goss really did receive $1,500 when he went to Philadelphia, and that Udderzook, getting uneasy as to the result of the trials, resolved to make sure of that much money. The other and more probable theory is that the conspirators expected to succeed in defrauding the insurance companies without tne matter coming into the courts. They were not provided with th* means to support Goss so long a time in idleness, aud it appears that he was continually embarrassed in money matters, and doubtless there was a great deal of trouble among them on this account. Influenced, doubtless, by this reason, Goss wanted to sell out to the insurance companies at an early date. In October negotiations were opened with the Travelers at Hartford, through a detective, who acted for another man who acted for Goss. The propositions were invariably rejected, as they were conditional upon a guar antee of safety of all concerned in the fraud. Even in the latter part of April, just before the trial, a proposition was made to produce Goss at a point not to be within one hundred miles from Buf falo, N. Y , on the deposit of $5,000, to be paid over on such exhibition, and the guarantee of immunity from crim inal prosecution. Doubtless Udder zook and the other conspirators were uneasy in regard to Gos*. His intem perate habits and perhaps his ihreats may have kept them in constant fear of discovery, and this wonld explain the letter of Dec. 16 from Udderzook to Rhodes, proposing the job "with a cool one thousand dollars in it." This offer having been refused, Udderzook, prob ably harraased with fear lest the fraud should be discovered and himself ar rested on a penitentiary offence, re solved to get Goss out of the way. Mr. Pennypacker, counsel for the insurance companies, says he has posi tive knowledge that a package was sent by A. C. Wilson, supposed to l>e Goss, to Miss Kate Ardin, at Baltimore, hut that of itself would scarcely lie proof that she was in any war a party to the conspiracy. He lias also a letter sup posed to have been written by a certain party in Baltimore under an assnmed name, with which he expects to unearth some important facts. He will not dis close its contents to the public as yet. There are some very suspicious circum stances lately developed which he thinks will implicate two ladies. There seems to be no doubt but that a great many persons are concerned in the trans action in some way or other, and very interesting developments may be ex pected daily for some time to come. A Shower of Strange Reptiles. A gentleman from Elk River, in Sher burne county, Minnesota, tells of a shower of reptiles which fell upon A meadow on the farm of Edward Cpham, near that place, on the morning of the Bint there is a sharp curve in the road, and lu re the roldn-r* had placed heavy timlier* aei\>*a the truck to throw the East-bound passenger train off. The engineer, Joan Rafferty, saw the obstruction in tuue to reverse his en gine smi apply the air brake ; but the roblwrs, observing the movement, llred at him from ambush and shot lumdrad. The engine struck the logs ami went oil the track into the ditch, and was fol lowed by oue of the baggage cars, the otilers remaining on the truck. Several passenger* were bruised, but none seri ously hurt. The robbers, who were masked, after o]>emtig ami emptying the safe of the express messenger of its content*, rode oil on horseback. Among the passenger* were thirty Chinese stu dents, eu route to Springfield, Massa chusetts. A thousand conjectures are current iu regard to the persons who robbed the tram. The most probable one is that the robbery was committed by person* living near where the robbery took place. A valise, tu which they canted off the mouey taken from the express conipauv's safe, was found five miles south of the wrecked train. \ igtlant parlies are scouring south west, ru lows, ami it is confidently believed the rob bers will Ih caught it they remain with in the Stale. A telegram received says the robber* have crossed the Burlington and Missouri Railroad. William A. Smith, conductor of the ill-fated traiu, testified at the Coroner's inquest ult the body of John Rafferty, the engineer, who was killed, thut the train was wrecked two ami a half or three miles west of Adair Station, ami six or seven hundred feet east of Turkey Greek Bridge ; was in the smoking-car, near the front end, and from the noise 1 thought the engine ass iu s ditch, with oue or two ear* piled upon it; was thrown under the seat in front of me; do not remember which side of the ear. 1 got out on the bulk. I went forward to see who was hurt; the first person met was oue of the masked men tiear the baggage ear door, who pointed a re volver tu each hand toward me ami told mo to get back, firing ut one and the same time ; 1 backed down as far as the sleeping coach In-fore 1 felt 1 was out of his way ; there I met Dennis Foley, the fireman ; he says, ** Billy, Jack is desd. The passenger* were in a hubbub ami the women ami children were crying. I told the passengers 1 thought the masked men were trying to rob the bag gage car, and tried to borrow a revolver, but (ailed. I could still see the man from where I was. Baw another passing up and down on the opposite Bide of the train. Think he was tiring at me, also. Borne of the passenger 4 asked me to j get into the traiu as these men wen' tiring at me and would be the cause of some of them being killed. I tbeu went into the sleeping car, at the rear, still trying to get a revolver, and urging the passengers to keep quiet, as these men were robbing the baggage car. I went out of the ladies' car up to the and heuee to the cngiue. Two balls passed through my clothing while I was on the bank. These shots came from the sonth side of the train. Did not see a man on the north side then. Did not see or hear anything more of the masked men. After the passengers had got quiet I went forward to investigate the causes of the wreck. At the hind truck of the smoking ear I found the fish plate had been removed from the ! rail on the north side, disconnecting a rail at both ends. A rope and strap i were tied in the bolt holes of the dis- j connected rail at the west end, and a rope passed under the south rail across • the ditch and up on to the bank. A piece of rope was also found 011 the ' bank, which seemed to have been broken from the other. It was a new rope, the j common size ; the west end was loose of the rail when I saw it; it was only a few inches froin the south rail ; the hind trucks of the smoking car were still on the track. We hat! been running eigh teen or twenty miles an hour. The passengers on the train report! that the scene was terrible and balfies description. When the crash came all 1 were thrown forward, some entirely out of their seats. Then came a recoil, and j immediately after they heard tiring, but, supposed that it came from the wreck. 1 Many of the men jumped from the cars und started to get forward, and were or- i dered back by the robbers, who con-! tinued their firing and enforced their commands by terrible oaths and tlireata. Back they went, and in the cars found women and children half crazed with fright, shrieking, crying and fainting, imploring men to protect them, and exclaiming, "My God ! We shall be j killed ! We shall be killed 1" The j stoutest hearts quailed and felt they were at the mercy of desperadoes. Al- i together, it was a scheme unprecedented in the history of railroading in this country, and never In-fore has so reck- 1 less and daring a scheme been carried to completion. All Western lowa is in 1 a fever of excitement. Farmers for miles around are leaving the harvest fields with their families and visiting the scene of the robbery. The engine and baggage cars remain as they were last night. The former is badly wrecked. Buperintendent Boyoe estimates the loss sustained by the oimpair, at about three thousand dollars. Governor Car penter issued a proclamation offering n reward of SSOO for the arrest of each person engaged in the robbery. The Actor Jlacrcady. The following anecdote of the great tragedian, Macreadv, came from a thea tre attache, and it* probably aa reliable a* the moot of them : Macreadv used every agency "that God and Mature pnt in his power " to make hia acting tell. He neglected no aid of light and abode ; no study of position ; uo mi nute attention to detail; indeed, no arti fice whatever that would heighten effect. The storm scene in " Ij>ar' was one of his most powerful representations. An old man, tottering ami exhausted, rav ing at the elements, and defying thun der, and hail, is n touching spectacle. To get himself up in style for this scene, he employed a strong and muscular friend to spend a few mo ments in shaking him vigorously, first right and then left, then forward and back, as a dog shakes a rag, till his hair was every which way, and his general condition so mixed up that, when the muscular man gave him the final shove on the stage, he was the very picture of a reeling, worn-out, and used-up old man, and, as he vented his rage on the stormy forces of natnre, the impression was tremendous. One night tlie stout party was somewhat late, and, fearing that he would l>e behindhand in his part as " shaker," rushed in hurriedly to what he supposed was the right place, and, seeing an elderly-looking man, with long, white hair, peering round as thongn he expected somebody he went for and shook him powerfully —shook him to make up for met time; shook the " daylights out of him," and then flung him headlong on the stage. The pit saw it in a moment, and they hooted as only the pit of the old days could hoot. The victim, scared almost to death, slunk back to private life, and the stout party didn't quite take in the situation till the outraged hear, indulg ing in a tall kind of rhetoricnot found in Shakespeare, impressed on him that he had manipulated the wrong man. A GOOD IDEA. —In every ear on the Connecticut River Railroad there is a box overiiead at one end in which is contained the name of the next station, which it is the duty of the brakeman to change as they leave the stations. It also states where they connect with other roads. As the change is made, a bell strikes twice, which attracts the at tention of the passengers, so that the box always exhibits the name of the next station, and so on. Thus passen gers always know the name of the stop ping place, and also if it connects with any other railroad. Mrs. Partington thinks that the gro cers ought to hire a musigj teacher to teach them the scales correctly. U ranges. Objects el lh Order of the Palren* el llll.lu.lxli). The question is often asked, what is the object of the Patron* of Husbandry, and what are they lalmring to aoooni plish ? An organ of the order tell* us us follows: The order proposes to meet dishonesty and injustice, corrup tion and tyrauuy, ring*, cliques, cor ners, combinations, nionojadios and the most outrageous and villainous system known to free people. Under the operation of this system the rich arc every day becoming richer, and the poor are* every day becoming poorer, The ends it sccka to accomplish by organisation are all good, and intended to inure to the benefit of the masses of the people who constitute the wealth creating power in the land. Railroad, manufacturing and other luoueved monopolies of the country, are absolving all the |K>wer, political as well as financial, which has been converted into an engine of oppression to the la boring classes. Tbe galling oppression to tlie agricultural masses, and those immediately dependent upon them, has become too intolerable longer to lu. Ivoruc The toiling millions who have made tlie country what it is, and by the sweat oi tli*. brow support their government grand, majestic, powerful ; command ing obedience at home ; feared and re s pec ted abroad -propose, uow that for bearance has ceased to be a virtue, to meet organisation, iu manly conflict ; to meet combination by combination, and check injustice, overturn the power of tyranny, arrest corruption in high places, siul substitute s system of legis lation for tlie people, instead of tbe present system of class legislation which ho* driven so many against whom it discriminates to tlie very threshold of bankruptcy, and to which the greater number of most oppressive wrongs are traeeable. It proposes, by every conceivable means that can bo employed in that di rection, to elevate the standard of edu cation among the agricultural masses, and to stimulate the oncoming genera tion of both sexes to aspire to the highest possible attainments and the purest excellence in their resiieotive spheres, and to promote the intellectual, social aud moral welfare of it* memlier* ship. Effects of Tobacco. The use of tobacco lias so much ex tended itself in the present generation that we are all obliged to make a decis ion for ourselves on the ancieut contro versy between its friendsaudenemies. We cannot form s reasonable opinion about tobacco without bearing 111 mind that it produces, according to circumstances, one of two entirely distinct ami eveu opposite classes of effects. Iu certain states of the body it acts as a stimulant, in other states as a narcotic. People who have a dislike to smoking affirm that it stupiflea ; but this assertion, at least so far aa the temporary conse quences are coacereed, is not supported by experience. Most of the really bril liant conversations that I have listened to have been accompanied by clouds of tobacco smoke ; and a great deal of the ln*st literary composition that is pro duced by contemporary authors is wrought by meu who are actually smok ing while they work. My own experi ence is that very moderate smoking acta as I pleasant stimulus upon the bram, while it produces a temporary lassitude of the musular system, not perceptible in times of rest, but an appreciable hin drance in times of muscular exertion. It is better, therefore, for men who feel these effect* from tobacco to avoid it when they are in exercise, and to use it only when the body reals, ami the miml labors. Pray remember, however, that this is the experience of an exceedingly modrrote smoker, who has 'not yet got himself into the general condition of body which is brought on by a larger indulgence in tobacco. On the other hand, it is evident that men engaged in physical labor dud a muscular stimu lus in occasional smoking, and not a temporary lassitude. It is probable that the effect varies with it* individual cases, ami is never precisely what our own experience lead us to imagine. For excessive smokers, it appears to be little more than the tranquillizing of a sort of uneasiness, the continual satis faction of a continual craving. 1 have never la-en able to ascertain that mode rate diminished intellectual force ; bat I have observed in excessive smokers a decided weakening of the will, and a preference for talking about work to the effort of actual labor. The opiuiona of medical men on this subject are so much at variance that their science only adds to our uncertainty. One doctor tells me that the most moderate smok ing is unquestionably injurious, while others affirm that it is innocent. Sneak ing simply from self-observation, I find that in my own case tea and coffee are far more perilous than tobacco.—/Vom the Intellectual Lije, by Philip ifilbert Hamertou. Burglar* In the House. There is a peculiar saddening effect, says the Donbury AWi, in awaking In the night at hearing burglars at work in jour house. Tina was the ease with Mr. Henrj on South street. As soon as he detected the noise, which appeared to lie down stairs, he softly crept out of lied, and commenced to prowl around for • match. His wife was sour awakened by the same noise, and be'.ieving that something was the matte r with the chil dren who; slept in the next room, she carefully withdrew from bed, fto not to disturb her husband, and started for the door. An instant later they collided. What he [thought was evident enough. All the hard earnings of an arduous life were at stake. Before him stood one or more robbers. With an exclama tion of condensed eloquence he clinched her. What she thought is not quite so evident, but it was doubtless of her husband and children, and being plucky withal, she at once twined her Angers in his hair, and gave him a wench that made him think of death. Then both of them went down to the Aoor together; she having the advantage in the fall, and getting on top, with her hnnds still in hair, she shook his head against the floor with an energy and courage that would have undoubtedly tilled him to overflowing with admiration, had he known who it was, or had he known anything at all. Every time she rapped him she shrieked for help, and in a brief space of time the children and Mrs. Eben Davis, who lives down stairs, were on the scene. Mrs. Davis was not dressed for compmy, but in the excite ment she didn't mind adornment. She had a candle in one hand, and a long carving fork in the other, and was aliout to drive the latter into the legs of the villian, when recognition ensued. Then Mrs. Davis laid down her candle in one direction, and the fork in another, and immediately returned to her own apart ments, her*yellow flannel hnigt-eap, as it shot down the stairs, being the first thing that Mr. Henry saw on springing to his feet. The children were returned to their room, and put to lied, but the liarcnts did not resume their couch, t was so pleasant that Mr. Henry con cluded to remain up the rest of the night and enjoy the scenery, and Mrs. Henry thought it best to stay up. too, so to change the cloths on his head as often as possible. Betting IHtorces. The husband ciui divorce his wife nt pleasure and leave her the charge of maintaining their children, in the Island of Corca. If she prove unfaithful he can put her to death. Tho first wife may be divorced in Biam, but not sold, as the others may be. She then may claim the first, third, and fifth child, and the alternate chil dren are yielded to the husband. When a man desires a uivorce in the Arctic regions, he leaves the house in anger, and d' es not return in several days. The wife understands the hint, packs np her clothes and leaves. If tho parties choose to separate in Cochin China, they break a pair of chopsticks or copper coin in the pres ence of witnesses, by which action the union is dissolved. The husband must restore to the wife the property belong ing to her prior to marriage. The I.H laborer* of Sew York Cltjr. ll is catimstatl on trustworthy ground that over 100,(XM) children are at work in the faetoriea of New York and the ueightroriug districts, while from 15,000 to 'JO,OOO are " floaters," drifting from one factory hi another. Of these the euVclo|M< factories employ almut H,OOO i children. The average earn tugs of the little workers are per week. The gold-leaf factories employ a large num ber of children, though the exact sta tistic* of tlte number can not be given. This occupation requires much skill and delicacy of touch ; it is not severe, but demands constant attention. The burnishing of gold, silver, ami china ware is mostly done by girls, some of whom are under thirteen years of age. Singularly enough, it is said that men in this business require to wear breast- I plates, in order to prevent injury from the steel instruments employed, while the girls wh labor at it sit at long ta bles, their undefended breasts pressing against the handles of the frame. Ful ly K.tKHi girls from twelve to sixteen years of age arc employed iu making paper collars. A girl cun couut ami bo* IM.tHKI collars in a day of ten hours. Paper-box factories, einbrsciug all sorts ami sir.es, from a match to a work box, employ at least 10,000 children. From 10,000 to l'J.OtlO children are en gaged in making paper boxes, of whom nearly H.OUO are under twelve years of age. Many are ouly live ami seveu years old. The latter are employed preparing and uuttiug feathers for col oring. Employers claim this to lie a h all by biiHtuess, but judging from the pale ami sickly countenances of the girls we doubt the sssertiou. Another luqmrtaut industry employ ing children in the city is the manufac ture of tobacco. The tobacco factories contain fully 10,000 children, of whom .">,OOO at least are under tifteeu years. The youngest child we saw employed in them was four years of age. He was engaged in stripping tobacco, and his average earnings were shout oue dollar j>er week. Many laborers work all their lives iu these factories. We saw persons as old as eighty years iu them. A man seventy years of age told us he had spent thirty years in one factory. | His two boys bail entered the factory with him at the age of ten and twelve years, and were uow at work as men in the same shop. Another, the foreman, ami general workshop manager, had en tered that factory thirty-five years ago, w heu a boy ten rears of age. in some of these factories boys under fifteen years are employed in dusky cellars and basements, preparing, bruang, and sweetening tlie weed preliminary to "stemming." The underground life in these damp, cavernous places tends to keep the little workers stunted iu body and mind. Other boys from ten to twelve years were squatting on the doors, whettiug the knives of the cut ting machine* with a mixture of rum and water applied with a sponge. The rapidity witb which the girl* work is wouderfuL A girl of sixteen years can put up thirteen gross of packages of chewing tobacco in tin-foil, and twenty two gross in |uq>er, iu oue day. (litis and boys from twelve to fourteen years earn in this business from foar to five dollars per week. Home little girls only eight years of age earn per week. There are already over 00,WW persons in New York who can not read or write. These little overworked operatives will swell this ignorant throng. Fortunate ly this great abuse has uot escaped the attention of humane men. Living Then and Now. The earnings of a boiler maker in a New York iron foundry in 1860wero $lO per week. The prices of articles of necessity in 1860 in New York were : House rent for four room*, per mouth. H M llecf, fnwli. roasting pieces, average. per tb 10} Hotter, per Ih IV. Milk, per quart sc. Dry codfish, per It* . ................. Sc. Potatoes, |i bushel 50c The sixty hours' labor a week of the man in 1800 would have procured him; lUuil.davs .. 67 llref. *s} Hutter. U| Milk, quarts 2"0 Codfish, tbs jotl Potatoes, bushel* S The wages of a Imiler maker in New York in 1*73 are 81b per week, aud the price of the articles enumerated arc iu 1873 : Rant four-room tenement. per mouth. .810.00 Ileef, roasting pieces, average |*er tb . JtV. Hutter, per lb XV. Milk, per quart .... 16*. Dry codfish, per It. 10c. Potatoes, |*r bttsliel 1.00 The aixty hours' labor of the boiler maker in 1873 procures him : llenl. day* .... tl) Hesf.lt>*..... Ml Hutter. lb* M| Milk, quarts ..... IW Codfish, lb- . 160 Potatoes, bushel* 16 To put these tables alongside each other, we find the following total. , Nor/y Su'y .Ve**irr <>/ Lift. k>wr# bwri jin 1X73 in 1360 Rant, days ~...; MAOj 67 Heef.lb* no 8&.S8 Hutter, 11M i 53 55 50 Milk, quarts l 200 Codfish, lie 160 tOO Potatoes, bush 16 23 517.50 737.75 The Prayer of Art*di> The Christian t'nion t H. W. Beeeherl, speaking of the speech by Professor Agassis, at the opening of the Anderson School of Natural Hiatoiy, aaya: After a few opening words, felicitously suited to put all their minds into fellowship, Agassis said, tenderly, and with touch ing frankness, "I think we have need of help. Ido not feel that I can call on any one here to oak a blessing for ns. i know I would not have anybody pray for us at this moment, I ask you for it moment to pray for yourselves," Upon this, the great scientist—in an age in which so many other great scientists have concluded that prnying is quite an unscientific and very useless {jroceeding— bowed his head reverently; lis pupils and friends did the same; and, there, iu a silence that was very Ix-autiful, each spirit wss free to. crave of the Great Spirit the bleasing that was needed. For our own part, it seems to us that this scene of Agassis and his pupils with h*. oils bowed in silent prayer for the blessing of the God of Nature to be given to that school then opened for the study of Nature, is a s|H>ctacle for some great artist to spread out worthily upon canvas, and to be kept alive in the memory of mankind. What are coronations, royal pageants,the parade of armies, to a scene like this ? It heralds the coaling of the new heavens and the new earth—the golden ugc when Nature and Man shall be re conciled, aud the conquests of truth .-Jiall supersede the conquests of brute force. The Shah's Hlfts. Ho fore leaving England the Shah made aomc coatly presents to several members of the royal family and the nobility. To the Queen lie gave a set of very rare and valuable jewels, to the Prince of Wales his photograph set in diamonds, and to the Duke of Cam bridge, as Commander-in-Chief of the Army, he presented an elegant sword, saying that "ho rejoiced to place the swordof Persia in the hand of England." A photograph set in diamonds was also offered to Earl Granville, who extracted the picture, pressed it to his heart, and returning the diamonds, explained to the Shah that much as he thanked him his position as an English Minister for bade his receiving a present from a for eign monarch. Lady Hawlinson and the Duchess of Sutherland also received presents of diamonds from the Shall, who, at the same time, presented Lord Money with a valuable snuff-box set with jcwelA He gave SIO,OOO to the servants at Buckingham Palace, and $15,000 to the police of London. Mr. J. S. Thompson, of the town of Auburn, Wis., had a maple orchard he thought very attractive. Tho tornado spoiled over one thousand of the trees, mainly by the uprooting process. Oak trees four feet in diameter, near the same forest, were torn up by the roots. A Man I toiled Alive. A few days ago John Coon an, a man emploved in the sugar reflnerjr of Ilew ley A Moaa in Dublin, met with a fear ful death. He had been but foar weeka in the manufactory, where he was em ployed to wash Uie hogsheads. This is done ins tank eleven feetic length. The hurrel ia rolled ill at one end and dragged along the tank by means ol so iron rod, alwut six or seven feet long, when it is hoisted up at the other end, the water Iming allowed to escape by turn ing the barrel. The person who thus washes the hogshead lias to traverse a rugged aud uneven wooden stage about the same height of the tank, which is uot more than aix or seven iuche* from the ground, and totally unprotected. Two traverse planks croaa the platform U> blind the hoards, and a parson dragging the cask* not looking Iwfore In in might stumble. The l>ards slope down toward the tauk, sud become wet during the process, which is iierfoimed within s foot of the edge of the vst. Sometimes the person washing would require aaais tan re iu hoisting, between sixty-six and sixty-eight hogsheads are washed in a dajr , the system adopted was simi lar to that uaed in English and Scotch refineries, except that IU those places the stage was of ruuud paving stonea in stead of wood, and that the workers wore clogs. Home time ago in this es tablishment a boy got his leg burned at the tank. Cooiiau fell in while dragging a barrel through the tauk. Two com rades, called by bis screams, witb diffi culty succeeded in pulliug him out. He seemed to be sitting iu the tauk as his feet were out of the water, lie was scalded from his chin to his knees and •lied from the injuries. A New Specie* of Rattlesnake. A Georgia paper gives the following description of a reptile lately seen : " A rattlesnake was recently killed in this vicinity of s species which 1 have never seen described, and which is prob ably unknowu to naturalist*. Perhaps the species is not widely diffused, but indigenous to Houtwestern Georgia aloue. The stuffed skin of the speci men from which this description is taken is four feet and eight inches long, exclusive of tlie head aud eight in cir cumference. The head was very large, the fangs uncommonly long, teeth re markably slender, and the sue of the snake gradually increasing until within four inches of the neck, when it ab ruptly contracted to a sue not larger than a man's finger : rattles were nine iu uumber. On the neck and forward part of tlie body the skin wss a bright golden color, partial I v covered with light brown scales, 'fhe reflection of tbe rays of light from these colors blending, threw a barely perceptible rosy hue over the whole inimitable by art. At the distance of twelve inches from the tail the color grew very dark and continued to deepen fit hue, the tail being of an intense black. Instead of irregularly shaped spots, as iu the common rattlesnake, this specimen had zigzag bands crossing the back parallel to each other. The bands were half an inch in w iMtli, and one and a half inches apart, the outer angles extending into long point, the one on the center of back the pointing towards the tail. Silver and (lold. A mixture of oxidized silver with gold is the latest novelty iu jewelry. Neck laces, look* U, crosses, chatelaines, and ball ear-rings ure shown iu this new combination. The necklace* have lung bars joined by links, and prettily en graved. With a pendent locket such necklaces cost (SOl There ia a fancy for antique-looking chasing on silver and gold jewelry. Slight vine* and del icate etching of slender fern leaves, lily tieila on long nodding stems, and many flowers of which the merest outline ia traced, are the favorites for ornamenta tion. Heavy chains of pure oxidized stiver are sold for ueck and fan chains for light mourning and for traveling ; price SB2. The fashionable gold ball ear-rings, bullet size, and qnaiutlv chased, coat 810. Oxidized silver bail ear-rings aud silvered chatelaine* are much worn with black dresses, both for mourning and by ladies who wear col or*. MEDICAL MANIACS. —There are num bers of medical men so wedded to the : old formulas, that all changes seem to them like innovations. These medical maniac* are, fortunately, incapable of much mischief in this practical age. While the Vntnui FITTER* are curing Indigestion, Nervous Debility, Consti pation, and countless other diseases that defy the remedies of the pharma copceia, it ia impossible to tburst down the throats of intelligent invalids " heroic" doses of mineral poison, or to persuade them to take adulterated al cohol, impregnated with cheap astrin gents, Ma" healing balm" or " bal samic preparation." Ymou BITTERS, a pure botanical tonic, and alterative, ; guiltless of the curse of distilled or fer mented liquor, is actually accomplish ing what the mineral and alcoholic cure mongers have so incessantly promised but have never yet performed. Under these circumstance- it is no wonder that this medicine ha* taken precedence of all those burning fluids mis-called tonics.—Own. VALI'ARLB OOLD MINK.— A Bnenos Ay res correspondent narrates the parti cular* of the discovery in a prtivince of Hie Argentine Republic of a wonderful gold mine, said to be the richest in the world. One-half of the Bite of the mine has been sold for $100,000,000. The sum paid seems truly enormous, and the promises made by the seller of the land are equally so. The terms of the sale are that one-fourth of the purchase money shall be cash, the rest to be paid on short time in instalments, the condi tion lieing a guarantee on the part of the seller that on a moderate outlay the mines will vield to the owners the prince ly sum of .45,000 patacones (about $33,- 000 in Dnitcd States currency) per day. TAIN! PAIN 11 BAIN!!! warns is THY BKLISVBB• Baader*. ynn will find II tu that fsvorit* Bom* Remedy. I'KRHV DAVIS• PAIX-KILLKR. It kai bar* Irllnl ill *v*ry variety of (limsts, and by almoat vvory nation known to A merle sirs It tv thn almost oouslant oompsnton snd invvtlm •blv fitend of the m The mucous metnhrsue|lioiiig the chambers of the nose, sod iu ltu'e (. l*i.l are diseased so that they draw from the Uood lie liquid, and ex iH'ar tn the air change** it into corruption. rhi life liquid u to build up the system, but it la extracted and the system la weakened by the loss. Tc rare, gam flesh and strength by using I*. Ihercw'e Golden Medical Discovery, winch aWo acta directly upon these glands, oar tecun* them, and *p|4y Dr. Mag* a Galarrb Itemc 1* with Dr. Pierre * Nasal Douche, the only method of reaching the upper carinas where the discharge acrumalaia* and corns* from. The iuatrufMni and two msdinmes sold for f3 by all Imigguris. 636 For loss of Appetite, Dyspepsia, In digestion, detwessMti at Spinn* and Genera! Debility, in their various forma, Paaao-Paos rMoaavan Euxta of Ctutut made by Cue wnx. Huiu- A Co., New York, and sold by all druggist*. t the best tank. As a icimulaM tome for patient*, recovering from fewer or ulber sickness, it has no equal If taken dur ing the esasrn it prevent* fever and ague and other lutenaitaeut fever* —em PxaCTUS Krmcr tone* up lbs system. LIKE LIUHTNI.NO or* the miruiilon* Cams t9MM4 witli Flagg's Indint licliuf. Arbra. I'sjite. Bowel lYmspUtato, ate.. ranmot exsM if tin* great medians* Is owed. K* lief warranted. or Bmt refunded. GdSSt Cbibt ADO no's EXCEUBOB Hun DRN is the tonal aura and cotuplal* preparation of its kind In lbs world; its affects are magtoal, ita character hgiwdfm*. tu UnU natural, fto quali ties enduring. (Vim. All the vear round Shrridan t ('aralry (Vmdi/aon henedar* should be given to bars** that are " kept up." To borate and cattle that grass HI summer they should only be given in winter and spring.— Com, Officers and ooldiera who served in the armv. physicians, surgeons, and eminent men and women everywhere, iout in recom mending JokMton'l .tnorfyer Ismmrni to be the beat internal and external family medicine ever invented. That's our experience.— Com. a Hevelntlens Sever tie Harkva erst. The philosophical theory that the kamae cyrtesi ken weakened by disease, oppressive hest. exces sive Isbor or say other esses, should be toned sod invigorated Instead of being subverted to the actios cf depleting drags. Is gaining groaed every day. The Introdacttoa of H •tetter's Itotasrh Bitters twenty years ago gave s powerfs! tsftasacw to this common tens* Idas. At the extraordinary eßeacy of Us Oreel Vegetable Bee tors tire became known, multitudes cf debt listed Invalids tamed wtlb loathing from the uausecu* and strength -destroy ing potion* with which it waa then the fashion to drench the sick, to Ut* renovating, appetuiag. vitalising preparation derived from the ftnaet roots, herbs and harks placed by botanical teaearch at the dispose I cf medical silence, fte eolations never go back wnfd. from that time to the preaaat the Imparlance of satiating end relt forcing natare In her straggle with disease ha* bans mora and more widely and keenly appreciated by the etch end Ue engrtlag. In tans of thousands of bones bold* Bos tatter's Blttere are looked upon as the one thing needful la cases of Dispepsta. General natality. Constipation. Nervous W eskness. Chills sad Paver, Ititl ns Affections sad all condlltoas of the body and mind that betoken a lack vital energy. When the gutrksttvvr raagee high, and the solid Beth te resolving Itself Into a den under the fevtd temperature, thtsngtacebte tdnl* It the hest possible safe guard against all the cleordere generated by a sultry and unwholesome atmos phere. It preeeute and relieves lassitude and languor, and enable! the eyetem t • endure with tmpnntty an unusual amount of rseiiton. IV all Invigorating and regnlattng msdUlaea, It la the parrel and moat wholesome The Markets. nrw von*. Beef Oattlo—l-rtmeto Kilru lluilorksg .11),a .IS.la First quality... II Sh .It Second quality .!•** •'* Ordinary thin Cattle.... ,Wa .11 k Inferior or lowest grade .Oh.ll MUch On we dO.flo sTS.OO II age—ldee .Iii' .*S Dreused Sheep '**• .il OoMoa—Middling SI a .XI Flour—P. it re Western A I*l a kft State Kit re Aid a d.45 Wheat—Red Western I.M a I.AS Stale 1.6T a I.St No. S Spring 1.40 a I.U RTS. WI a .HO Barley -Malt l.B lUi Onto -Mixed Western .SOtjn .41 Cora—Mixed Western 51 a .64 Hay. per toe 16.00 nJBOO Mra, |wr ton 10.00 alf.oo Hope.. Tfc. .SSa.aO-tOe. .It a .18 Pork Mess Id 76 *17.80 Lard i"HI .0Bf petroleum -Crude ....6 a fi> Iteflued IB Batter—State N a .'JO Ohio Fancy 10 a .20 " Yelioa .17 a ,10 Western Ordinary .*... .16 a .Id Pennsylvania flue 13 a .76 Cheese State Factory.... llla .131, " Skimmed 06 a .07 Ohio 10 a .17 Egga—Stale Id a .70 aorrxid. Beef OatUe,.... 6.35 6.38* Sheep 4.T6 n 5.63)f Iloge—Live I S a .*0 F7onr 7.60 aLO.HO Whtwt -No. 7 Spring 1.33 a l.Sfl Oorn 43 a .4* Oata M a .37 Rye 74 a .75 Barley 00 a 1.00 Lard 00 a.<-8* tuin. Wheat 1.5 allS Rye—State. SO a .88 J| Corn—Mixed 60 a .60 Barley State 1.10 a 1.11 | Oats—State 47 a .47 j ruuituriu. Flour-Penn. Extra 7.60 a 6. SO Wheat—Western Red 1.00 s 1,63 Corn—Yellow M a 6 Mixed 58 a .60 Petroleum-Crude IS ReflnadlßK Reef Cattle OS a .07 Clover Seed 7.00 a 6.00 Timothy 8.76 a 3.78 HUUgftft Ootton—bow Mlddltnga It g ,iw Flour—Extra AO# a 7.35 Wheat 105 a l.fld Oorn—Yellow 60 a .00 Oata dO • .48 Gentlemen leaving homo for o ran-1 mr trip should U*e with thom Elm-1 wood or Warwick oollsr*. They will' hoop oloon longer titan linen, end five more iotiofoction.—Oam. Hn FISRIMO. —I bad an nnole who died from excessive excitement ceased by hrook Aalung for trout. He hod fiahed for thirty two yearn without sue ceaa, but early in hia Unrtv-seooud year he P ot a bite. "Major, he observed on hia dying tied, "I should die happjr if I were dead oertain that waa a trout," A DIVFEBEMCB. - The annual post age on a copy of the New York daily papers delivered at the residence of the subscriber in Han Franciaoo is |1 30 per annum | but it is $9lO per annum if planed in the bos of a subscriber in the New York Fost-office. Am H Y paraou. *l4 or yvang, of ilik see m*k> a* t+4-i-mdiml tlvlug la efty or iwustry ; M" F>R
    I,M • fall IHUWMSM aeMarM rrrll. Adar.se " |iilHlnt luttMlh*," M Vuiii>iU'> iiimi, Boetoa, Uses- | v . ,t . teat* a BseF flea SmaffiiMMfllsV lr i l-D Ouus "*• faraisk.a to ih* "Caw Coo" flat •rf Hiicmiw aaa iwn. h. li>rM u b IM b Week tain ■■* ta *a. Ala " MrwU-llOft/* rH't r*r%stm t aIJU, < wrin. " W s4 C am.ua Suus* Maw lilaataatea wo.ißra Lu*4 are," hound iamnrueeu.l&ieui* a* mail hand Cm mh it... a4 rt.rwla.i u, WILLIAM kKAO 4 iuMS. IB Paaaull K.tl ••••##. Mo*to*. Ajoata. Shoe and leather Chronicle •S a I ear, la s4taara. A WmAly Meojj far fk-T tied Sana Ham, Twkfla fiHoa IttiUM at W. a. Vae UrMkiivHii Xe. • Kerry at, N aw-rasa STRAUB MILL COMPAN Y nitiaiATi, a, Manuletlnrrrsof r*rto> iIJHa J\ blr*tll,.War.M am, /it k--~~ %■ f • Kee4,lMra|laie uu /fISCa i ■ 8 uppvr-rutuw-ri lorl'.rw /|AP T: 1 r Mrrrlwal Wark. ZjWRSC liLl Mid fur Pamphlet and Usmpnsa Wkitrkiil d_f is THE ONLY PAIN REMEDY tkal Instantly iteft tka Itxat .srrurtstlag Falsa, nllaya lnSamartcma, as 4 curve fMiua. AMI Mfttu Langs. Iuu, Mosaic, or other (tutt er MtM. by sea application, 1* FROM OMK TO TWKXTT fill TBS. mo attur Mow violent or .acrurtatlug tk* Fata tka Rllkl MATir. Bvd-riddvn. Utia. CnppD-d, M.r voan. Mrarslglc, or prostrated with dtaaas* amy auflrr RADWAY'S READY RELIEF WILL AJTOBD IMSTAJTT EASE *£gL^mWd-BUate, Inflajcation of th* K-ar.t ConreeUon of the Lugs SOT, TkmL DiflmU Hysteria*, Croup. Diptfcena. ffffinliftn Toothschß, Hmrklgik, Bheamatiam, OaU Chills, Ague Chills. The application of tfcaEEAOT IM.IEP to tka part n Fart* Vkrr. ik* pain or tlßwlty tiUtl wtH if * -a rsar sad naift fl T* wist j 4tp. m half a tUar of alter wtSS ton Pw inUittlap < urr rraxupa §M4WM. SUMBMfIk, in vst suit Fvi atrfcaro. or MUM frwu ckjra of water. It takattar tkaa FraaATnrak4y or IV tara as a sUatslsat. FEVER AND AGUE FETES sirp Aor* raroS Am- *t tuts IWk It not a raaMS.at wl la tk.a •otl l tkal wtU cmvS F.var and Ays. a4 all otker SUirt-u. WtMsMk Srorlrt Trpfc. .a. Tvllou. aa4 otkar rvr* (*IW IT MAP* AT * FILLS) so yalefc as SAWAT\ "'^'rilT-Y'cnWTß FER BOTTLE HEALTH, REALTY, DR. RADWAY'S Sarsanarilliau Resolrent HasmadathasnostastmitbtaeCsrss; §©qeiek lul Meditana, that Every Day an Increuae in Flesh and Weight is Seen and Felt The Great Blood Purifier Bwry drop of Ik. SARSAPAKIUIAS SSMOL . **T waantnte tkruayk ika_ Sk-bl. i"t. I'rtaa, and otkvr fluids .o4 )u.oaa of tkr ayatvaj tka rtrw of Ufa. II rvu tk. "Fit w tfcakoSy oik uud.ai4 nudrrtaL ®7P*'"t y pimcplr. nr. nllblnlbt rarsllva ran®, of Una Mf-d.rn Ckaaiiatry. and aftrar d.ra' as. n.a prova to my pram_uatkfl It rrr nih.r of tbrM fvim. of dlduda lu yotdat pouar ta "f*ih h ."pu.Bl. dally WKxnaisy radarad ky tkd vast., and d#OOTß|K>.ittu'< Ikal >* rmtlaaally pro pwinl. Ittmdt la arrvsun* ikrM vulva .and rrpatra tka aaa witk n.w m.lrfiou kf.likf bl—id—and lk!a Ik. SAKfIAFAatLLIAS IU and Sou swaro—a cars ta urlata; f'l akva u lb.a raaiad* cBtan<-U .IS ami of parlflralloa, and smwrd. In o.attiiaMa* Iks kwa of w-utu. ltd imin will ka rapid, and vv.ry day tk# patlut will fr.l bim.rtf bvltr and atroaflvr, tka Pxid dmnM baitar, appauia laprvvtafl, aad flrsk aad w.teM Incvualtifl. Not naif Sou tka liuiriltuulSiwirm•*- rvl all ksnara r.wrdl • I apntt in lb. rata of rhrna f. p.-r fnlu*. CanatiintTua.l. and flkta dtaniSUi kat it ta tka only jwaiu*. car# fc.r Kidney and Bladder Complaints, rrtn.ry, uid Woiak dlar.au. Orav.l, Ptal■>*, Propay.Btnppeir. of W.i.r, InawttDaaßoaof L rtaa, Ntipbr. Pr tk* cars of alldianrd.ifl of Ik* Stomach. Ur. Sow.la. Elda.ya, Bladdag K.nona Pia.a.u, Hr.d h*.Coriipiion.CoaiiUi im. lodiyuu- !i. Pfiiw-paia, Rlilvnanaas, Biltong Typbu. and Tvrhoi* of Heat. Barnlng tn the Flealh A few doaej . f RADWAY'S TILLS will fru theayt tem from all th* above named disorders. Price 23 ceatt per Box. Sold ky Dragging. KSAD " FAI.SK AMD TBrE" Sand one laHg'' ■ tamp tn BAPWAV dCO . Ko, SI Warrsa St, H. I Information worth thousands will be sant yor. WYOMING SEMINAET • AND Commercial College, One of th. largeat Boarding School! tor both UIM In th. Culled Status, tlx courses i f study Mili tary Tactic*. Commercial Cclleg. Coarse and T.la traphing. Terms low. Falli.rm open" Bepi.-mbar , lfwS Bend ftir a Caialnane toßrv. O COPBLAKD, A M..orL 1. BPRAOCB. Klagalon. Pa. Annuel M. a. sassx. m. N„ N. ISJS it IUIMMBI.. CbMwsw .... wily: Tea Tauavnuvr u Muanr tbau.aui tundviuo f*i 'VUnR !Nti LL?> vaeekeuarSDtaed.RaeFeete. •as day re verniig; noaapni Irvqmr sn. full Inetructions and raluable pii-kage of rooflauent rrv. by mail, addrwis, wiUinx oent retnrrnfj :ntk H. YOUNG A 00-ldCortL .-dt. Naw York. ear liittrnt nn a purely Vgeuibl in parftttoo, made chiefly from toe D*- Mve Iwrbe found on the lower ranges of tie Sierra Nevada mountßlna of CAI for i, the medicinal properties of which re extracted therefrom without (he use f Alcohol. Tbo question It almost lily asked. " Wlwl I* the cwwo of the nparalleled aocceas of VixaaAß BIT t Iwf ,, Our answer U, tlrnt thej reroovo be cause of disease, and tbe patient re over* his health. They are the great iloot! purifier and a Ufe-giving principle, a Tieni* t Heuovator and larigorator of the sratem. Never before in the Matter of tfw wdd baa a mmitatod bean | compmindiul posssadog U mm*abl inaiUiM of ViaaoAsßfrrere ia bash**** sick of evtwy disßßsa MffiilMN* Are a *WBtU Porgsaive as w*fl aa a Teaie, mlievrng < onstioa r of tha Uxor sad Visosrai Orgmsa, is Whow ' The proj*rUi of Da- Wigß VmaoAß 11I7TMBS are Aperiflet, ( Artniiuktife, XauitMNM, Ld-islivt!. Diapsqe, Mwi*i.ie. O-üßtsr-Irritant, fiodorifie. Altare tivtk and Anti Bfliwua. U M. HaWISALO A CO.. Draggiuu sod Gan. Agts. tarn Frw4aon_ Catjfmim, laid ky nil OraggM* ssd Uenl.rs. HT W P—No W Wrife, fur a rrlaa Law to J. H. iOHXSTOV, BsuMiasH tt. Ktnemiflh. BOKgSA^SIPSSIH Slt°irtanal. f vXSifil&Sm. da. tmrft'iutammO to dislaaa vr dwka. Army Bama. Bvvwlvuru. ou. feinght tt trsdad 1 r Ooods aant ky asprwaa C O Is k. ax smlaad hsftira psid tW. frSEHSEHS W m ■raEGRSrAi^SATi^ AND BLOOD PRBJJTEB. II ia not* iftindkntrum, TH- :"('!< .in tit. atwpubtiahed on each bottle of medicsne. It AASSLI is used and reetmimeodcd by l'hjuciana wherever it baa been introduced. It will poflitiTvly care SCJtOFI'LA to U warfowa atagem, MHKU MATI&M, WHITE &WEL- J.jyO, GOVT, GOITRE, ■ BRONCHITIS, NERVOUS I DEBILITY, INCIPIENT i 'ONSIEPTTON, amdalldis tsars eriaicg from aa impure condition of the blood. Bend for our BcodPAue Auuxw, in which you will find c rtiflcnies firm reliable snd tnwtworthy Physicians, Hmistos of the Gospel and others. Fr- A Wilsse Can. *f *aM***a, ssys twEss FMdil k raves of Smfkb and other dliisaas with mmck aeUWao- Ml 1; , Vl • YCFlgh.^ ttmaHtiwd.rntymg ß ia ampenor lo spy r 111 atalSas k. kwv wtr awd. Bcv. tkfeurr KalL at tka BkßUkas* *. t ffSTswXoth, j* ka has ka aa mack Umto** by tm ww.tkat be rl eertully recrwrr ind* It losßkia S^^rcaiMS: ■tovsctutii. Isg'lfi geiyilm, armW. TSSSJJ, ")v ItTtmd koa ad Mkasa sesossa skmiatoMk*, THE Boa.TisTAg Q| QOEXECrtOX WTtg OCT iwafflsiirgnjd will oars ChtSls and Fasdr. Lrver oampkatat, Pya srsws3 # KSS* Ciftfikf Of ARmbm. Addrvsa cLinmare a eo,. ILCimaimk. iWSAasata, Ml. Bamesaker ta sA yeWMßronpet far noeA*Ass__ "AMERICAN SAWS." BE.IT IK THR WOBLD. jiovtm.r.roorH*a niMtxsts. rCKFOR ATKP 4 HfkMM M HMlma. Aiyr:toarea Bnakels ground pr JC|BI Spr- HMM 1 ■ ' - — New Uaaen. Coon. CONSUMPTION And. Its Our©. WILLSOPTS Carbolated Cod Liver Oil p a scientific combination of two weD-knows medV clues. lis theory is first to arrest the decay, then build up the system Physicians find thedociriueeon rect. The really startling cures performed by WUL mail jmjksjrnnf Corboße And pmutrata ernci Decay, ll Is the moet powerful solbieptlc In the known wsrM. En tering into the Hrruitton. It st once rrsnplea with corruption, aad decay eeaaea. It poriflea the sooreca of disease. _ CM Lirtr Oilu IVaturStbat aiMMaaf la reslstla* Conauinntlon. Put up la laiwe wedftrdhajwd bottles, bearimaftite IwvYator', iguaturr, nut is •add bjOHc best Prepared by *r. K. wxXrZjdkonr, S3 Jobu S tract. Sew Yaafc